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IRRIGATION

Bernard A. ETCHEVERRY, B.S., Professor of Irrigation Engineering (Chairman of the Department).

SIDNEY T. HARDING, B.S., Associate Professor of Irrigation.

Courses 101, 102A, 102B, 103, 104, and 112 are designed to meet the needs of engineering students who wish to make a specialty of irrigation. They appear as part of the course in irrigation engineering in the College of Civil Engineering. Courses 1, 101, 104, 105A, 105в, and 115 are desiged for students in the College of Agriculture. Courses 101, 103 are also open to other students who have junior standing.

Students will be recommended for honors on the same basis as in civil engineering.

LOWER DIVISION COURSE

1. Agricultural Use of Water and Irrigation Practice. (3) I. HARDING Sec. 1, Tu Th S, 9; Sec. 2, Tu Th S, 10.

Soil moisture and plant growth; disposal of irrigation water applied to the soil; water requirements of crops; duty of water; preparation of land and methods of irrigation; farm ditches and structures; small pumping plants; measurement of water. For students in the College of Agriculture, but open to other students, except those in the College of Civil Engineering for whom course 103 is offered.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

Junior standing is prerequisite to courses 103 and 104.

101. Irrigation Institutions and Economics. (2) II. M W, 8. HARDING Prerequisite: course 1 or 103.

Water rights, irrigation institutions and organizations.

102A. Irrigation Engineering. (2) II. Tu Th, 11.

ETCHEVERRY

Prerequisite: Civil Engineering 110 or Mechanical Engineering

103A.

Investigation and general planning of irrigation systems; conveyance of water; silt problems; design of canals, tunnels, flumes, pipelines, inverted siphons.

102в. Irrigation Engineering. (2) I. Tu Th, 9.

Prerequisite: course 102A.

ETCHEVERRY

Principles of design of diversion weirs, headworks, wasteways, sand boxes, falls, checkgates, lateral headgates, road crossings, special types of distribution systems, measuring devices.

103. Agricultural Use of Water and Irrigation Practice.

(2) I. ETCHEVERRY

Tu Th, 11. Sources of water supply; disposal of irrigation water applied to the soil; water requirement of crops; duty of water; preparation of land and methods of irrigation; small pumping plants.

For engineering students, but open to other students excepting those in the College of Agriculture, for whom course 1 is offered. 104. Drainage. (2) II. Tu Th, 8.

Prerequisite: course 1 or 103.

ETCHEVERRY

The structure of soils and its relation to drainage; planning of drainage systems for overflow, waterlogged and alkali lands; organization of drainage districts.

105A. Agricultural Hydraulics and Elements of Irrigation Engineering. ETCHEVERRY (3) I. Tu Th, 10, and one hour to be arranged. Prerequisite: Civil Engineering la-lв.

Principles of hydraulics as applied to irrigation systems. The elements of irrigation projects; the conveyance of water in canals, tunnels, flumes, and pipe-lines. Open to students in the College of Agriculture. Not open to students who receive credit for course 102A. 105B. Elements of Irrigation Engineering. (2) II. Tu Th, 10. ETCHEVERRY Prerequisite: course 105A.

Irrigation structures, their function and proportions; systems of distribution; measurement of water and measuring devices.

112. Irrigation Design. (2 or 3) Either half-year. Tu Th, 1–4. ETCHEVERRY

Prerequisite: course 102A, Civil Engineering 108A-108в. The design of structures such as flumes, drops, inverted siphons, and headgates, with estimates of cost.

115. Irrigation Drawing. (2) I. Tu Th, 1-4.

Prerequisite: course 105.

HARDING

Drawing and making estimates of typical irrigation structures as used on the farm. For students in the College of Agriculture. 119. Undergraduate Thesis Course. (2) Either half-year.

GRADUATE COURSES

Concerning conditions for admission to graduate courses see page 3 of

this announcement.

202. Advanced Irrigation Design. (2) II. Tu Th, 1-4.

Prerequisite: course 112.

ETCHEVERRY

207. Operation and Maintenance of Irrigation Systems. (2) II. HARDING M W, 11. Prerequisite: courses 1 and 105 for agricultural students; courses 103 and 102 for engineering students.

208. Seminar in Irrigation. Either half-year. ETCHEVERRY, HARDING Maximum credit 3 units. Conferences on topics concerning the development of irrigation industry.

299. Thesis for the Master's Degree.

ITALIAN

ELIJAH CLARENCE HILLS, Ph.D., Litt.D., Professor of Spanish (Chairman

of the Department).

HERBERT H. VAUGHAN, Ph.D., Professor of Italian.

MARIA TERESA TOMMASINI, M.A., Associate in Italian.

Dora V. GARIBALDI, A.B., Assistant in Italian.

Preparation for the Major:

1. Italian A, B, C, D, or four years of high school Italian, or other equivalent to be tested by examination.

2. A minimum of two years of Latin in the high school. Precedence will be given to students with three or more years of Latin. Those unable to fulfill this requirement must offer compensatory courses in European history and other Romanic languages.

3. Only students who pronounce correctly and read fluently will be admitted to upper division courses. Students who transfer from other institutions will be tested by oral examination.

The Major:

Sixteen to eighteen units of upper division courses in Italian and six to eight units of upper division work in either French, Spanish, or Latin. The department recommends as a supplementary choice among the free electives: (a) History of the country or countries most intimately connected with the major, (b) additional study in Latin literature, (c) related courses in other literatures, (d) courses dealing with English expression, (e) the history of philosophy, (f) German, (g) Greek.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

A. Elementary Italian. (5) Either half-year.
Three sections, M Tu W Th F, 8, 9, 1.

TOMMASINI in charge

Essentials of grammar. Short stories by contemporary writers.

B. Elementary Italian. Continuation of A. (5) Either half-year.
I, M Tu W Th F, 10; II, M Tu W Th F, 8, 9, 1.

Prerequisite: course A or its equivalent.

TOMMASINI in charge

TOMMASINI

C. Intermediate Italian. Continuation of B. (3) I.

M W F, 9. Prerequisite: course B or its equivalent.

A detailed study of syntax: dictation and memorizing of prose and verse; conversation; selection from modern texts.

D. Intermediate Italian. Continuation of C. (3) II.
M W F, 9. Prerequisite: course C or its equivalent.

CD. Intermediate Italian. Continuation of B. (5) II.

VAUGHAN

TOMMASINI in charge

M Tu W Th F, 10. Prerequisite: course B or its equivalent.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

Sixteen units of lower division courses in Italian, or their equivalent, are required for admission to any upper division course.

101A-101в. Conversation and Composition. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 2.

103A-103B. Modern Italian. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 1.

TOMMASINI

VAUGHAN

A detailed study of standard authors, prose, and verse, with dictation and reports on assigned themes. Prerequisite: course CD, or its equivalent, or a special examination.

*108A-108B. The Italian National Novel.

M W F, 10.

(3-3) Yr.

VAUGHAN

(3-3) Yr.

VAUGHAN

109A-109B. Dante: Vita Nuova and Divina Commedia. M W F, 2.

Prerequisite: 6 units of upper division work in Italian.

199. Special Study for Advanced Undergraduates. (1-5). Reading course.

The STAFF (HILLS in charge)

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JURISPRUDENCE

GEORGE P. COSTIGAN, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Law.
ALEXANDER M. KIDD, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
MATTHEW C. LYNCH, J.D., Professor of Law.

ORRIN K. MCMURRAY, Ph.D., LL.B., Professor of Law and Dean of the
School of Jurisprudence (Chairman of the Department).

MAX RADIN, LL.B., Ph.D., Professor of Law.

AUSTIN T. Wright, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.

WILLIAM CAREY JONES, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Jurisprudence, Emeritus. WILLIAM WARREN FERRIER, JR., J.D., Associate Professor of Law. BARBARA N. GRIMES, J.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Law and Social Economics.

JOHN U. CALKINS, JR., J.D., Lecturer in Law.

WILLIAM EDWARD COLBY, LL. B., Lecturer in Law of Mines and Water. M. W. DOBRZENSKY, J.D., Lecturer in Commercial Law.

FRANK E. HINCKLEY, Ph.D., Lecturer in International Law and Lecturer in Consular and Diplomatic Administration.

ROSAMOND PARMA, J.D., Lecturer in Legal Bibliography, Librarian of the Law Library.

E. J. SINCLAIR, J.D., Lecturer in Law.

PAUL VINOGRADOFF, F.B.A., M.A., D.C.L., LL.D., Dr. Juris., Dr. of History (Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence, Oxford University), Lecturer in Jurisprudence.

MATT WAHRHAFTIG, J.D., Lecturer in Law.

Fees. In the School of Jurisprudence an incidental fee of $37.50 per half-year is payable by every student, graduate or undergraduate, regular or special, before his study-card is filed. This fee includes the incidental fee of $25 payable by all students of the University together with a law library fee of $12.50.

Non-residents enrolled as students in the School of Jurisprudence pay a fee of $100 each half-year. This sum includes the incidental fee charged to residents.

CURRICULA OF THE SCHOOL OF JURISPRUDENCE

The normal minimum time for the completion of the combined academic and legal curriculum is six years. The School of Jurisprudence maintains a four-year curriculum and a three-year curriculum. While students are encouraged to obtain the A.B. degree before entering the School of Jurisprudence, those who have full junior standing will, for the present time, be admitted to the four-year curriculum, and those who have full senior standing will be admitted to the three-year curriculum.

Students who enter the legal curriculum with senior standing may obtain the A.B. degree on the satisfactory completion of the first year of such curriculum.

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